Classic Pink Floyd track can be recreated from brain activity

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US scientists say they've used computer algorithms to recreate a recognisable version of Pink Floyd's 1979 track, Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1, from brain activity recorded while people listened to the song. The research also revealed a new area of the brain underlying rhythm perception, the team says. Past research has shown algorithms can decode and reconstruct speech from brain scans, but not music. The researchers used 2,668 electrodes attached to the brains of 29 people who listened to the Pink Floyd track to track brain activity, finding the music affected 347 of the electrodes, mostly located in three brain regions: the Superior Temporal Gyrus (STG), the Sensory-Motor Cortex (SMC), and the Inferior Frontal Gyrus (IFG). Analysis revealed a unique region in the STG that represents rhythm, in this case the guitar rhythm, the scientists say. 

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From: PLOS

Classic rock music can be recreated from recorded brain activity

The technique also identifies a new brain region necessary for perceiving musical rhythm

Researchers led by Ludovic Bellier at the University of California, Berkeley, US, demonstrate that recognizable versions of classic Pink Floyd rock music can be reconstructed from brain activity that was recorded while patients listened to the song. Published August 15th in the open access journal PLOS Biology, the study used nonlinear modeling to decode brain activity and reconstruct the song, “Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1”. Encoding models revealed a new cortical subregion in the temporal lobe that underlies rhythm perception, which could be exploited by future brain-machine-interfaces.

Past research has shown that computer modeling can be used to decode and reconstruct speech, but a predictive model for music that includes elements such as pitch, melody, harmony, and rhythm, as well as different regions of the brain’s sound-processing network, was lacking. The team at UC Berkeley succeeded in making such a model by applying nonlinear decoding to brain activity recorded from 2,668 electrodes, which were placed directly on the brains of 29 patients who then listened to classic rock. Brain activity at 347 of the electrodes was specifically related to the music, mostly located in three regions of the brain: the Superior Temporal Gyrus (STG), the Sensory-Motor Cortex (SMC), and the Inferior Frontal Gyrus (IFG).

Analysis of song elements revealed a unique region in the STG that represents rhythm, in this case the guitar rhythm in the rock music. To find out which regions and which song elements were most important, the team ran the reconstruction analysis after removing the different data and then compared the reconstructions with the real song. Anatomically, they found that reconstructions were most affected when electrodes from the right STG were removed. Functionally, removing the electrodes related to sound onset or rhythm also caused a degradation of the reconstruction accuracy, indicating their importance in music perception. These findings could have implications for brain-machine-interfaces, such as prosthetic devices that help improve the perception of prosody, the rhythm and melody of speech.

Bellier adds, “We reconstructed the classic Pink Floyd song Another Brick in the Wall from direct human cortical recordings, providing insights into the neural bases of music perception and into future brain decoding applications.”

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Research PLOS, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
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PLOS Biology
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Organisation/s: University of California, Berkeley, USA
Funder: This work was supported by the Fondation Pour l’Audition (FPA RD-2015-2 to LB), the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (R01- EB026439 and P41-EB018783 to PB), and the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (U24- NS109103, U01-NS108916, and R13-NS118932 to PB; R01-NS21135 to RTK).
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